1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 19">*19
Taxpayer transferred an oil lease on July 1, 1952, for $ 105,000 which amount was his basis in the equipment, and reserved 75 per cent of seven-eighths of the oil produced until $ 150,000 with interest was received and thereafter 80 per cent of seven-eighths of the oil until $ 200,000 additional, with interest, was received. The purchasers of the lease arranged to have a third party purchase the $ 150,000 oil payment which was transferred for $ 150,000 in cash August 14, 1952, and paid out in January 1953.
33 T.C. 345">*345 The respondent determined deficiencies in income tax and additions to tax as follows:
Petitioner | Year | Deficiency | Additions |
Estate of O. W. Killam, Deceased | 1952 | $ 48,747.10 | |
Winfield Killam | 1952 | 581.44 | |
1953 | 563.98 | ||
Radcliffe Killam and Sue Spivey Killam | 1952 | 581.44 | $ 34.89 |
1953 | 1,496.78 | 89.81 | |
John G. Hurd and Estate of Patricia K. Hurd, | |||
Deceased, Radcliffe Killam, Independent | 1952 | 564.34 | 33.86 |
Executor | 1953 | 1,285.36 |
The issues are (1) whether the sale of an oil payment in 1952 resulted in capital gain or ordinary income subject to depletion, and (2) whether a payment for purchase of assets of an oil lease should be allocated between the oil reserves and the equipment. Certain facts are stipulated. The taxpayers' returns were filed with the director of internal revenue at Austin, Texas.
FINDINGS OF FACT.
The stipulation of facts and the exhibits thereto are incorporated by reference.
33 T.C. 345">*346 On July 1, 1952, 1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 19">*21 O. W. Killam had owned and operated for more than 6 months a producing oil and gas lease known as the Bruni 77 Lease, located in the Quien Sabe Field, Webb County, Texas. On that date the lease and well equipment on such lease had an adjusted basis in the hands of Killam of $ 105,655.45, and the leasehold an adjusted basis of $ 78,238.30.
In 1952 and 1953, Winfield Killam, Radcliffe Killam, and John G. Hurd were equal partners in a partnership doing business as Killam and Hurd.
On July 1, 1952, O. W. Killam sold, transferred, and assigned all of his interest in and to the equipment and leasehold of the Bruni 77 Lease to Killam and Hurd reserving to himself, his heirs, and assigns the following:
(1) Seventy-five per cent of seven-eighths (75% of 7/8ths) of the oil, gas and other minerals produced, saved and marketed from the above described property until O. W. KILLAM his heirs and assigns, shall have received, without deduction of any kind or character, from the proceeds from the sale of seventy five per cent of seven eighths (75% of 7/8) of the oil, gas and other minerals produced from the above described property, the sum of $ 150,000.00, together with an additional sum equivalent1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 19">*22 to four per cent (4%) interest per annum from the date of the unpaid balance thereof, application of all sums to be made, as received first to accrued and unpaid interest and then to the unpaid balance of said sum of $ 150,000.00. The purchaser of said interest in current production shall be entitled to deduct and pay severance and production taxes assessed against the same, but such taxes shall not be considered in determining when said sum of $ 150,000 and interest have been received. Assignees shall promptly pay before delinquency all ad valorem taxes levied and assessed against the interest hereby conveyed and shall not be entitled to reimbursement therefor from assignor.
(2) If, as and when O. W. KILLAM, his heirs or assigns, shall have received the aforesaid sum of $ 150,000.00, plus interest at the rate of four per cent (4%) per annum from date, as above provided, then the said O. W. KILLAM, his heirs and assigns, shall be entitled to receive (and same is hereby excepted from this assignment), the additional sum of $ 200,000.00 with interest at the rate of four per cent (4%) per annum on the unpaid balance thereof from the date of the last payment on the aforesaid sum of 1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 19">*23 $ 150,000.00, from the proceeds of the sale of eighty per cent of seven-eighths (80% of 7/8) of the oil, gas and other minerals produced from the aforesaid property. Application of all sums received are to be made, as received, first to accrued and unpaid interest and then to the unpaid balance of said sum of $ 200,000.00.
Under the agreement Killam and Hurd paid to O. W. Killam cash in the amount of $ 105,655.45.
On August 14, 1952, the $ 150,000 oil payment reserved in the above lease was assigned by O. W. Killam to Richard F. Campbell, for $ 150,000 in cash. Campbell financed the purchase by borrowing this amount from a bank at 3 1/2 per cent interest, giving a deed of trust for the oil payment as security. This oil payment paid out in January 1953.
33 T.C. 345">*347 On January 7, 1953, the $ 200,000 oil payment reserved in the above lease was assigned by O. W. Killam to Richard F. Campbell for $ 200,000 in cash. Campbell financed this purchase by borrowing $ 200,000 from the same bank at 3 per cent interest, giving a deed of trust for the oil payment as security. This oil payment paid out in September 1953.
OPINION.
The respondent determined that the $ 150,000 received by O. W. Killam1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 19">*24 from Richard F. Campbell in 1952 for the assignment of an oil payment of that sum plus interest was ordinary income subject to depletion.
The petitioners contend that the transaction was a sale resulting in long-term capital gain. They say, first, that the agreement for sale of the lease included an agreement to find a purchaser for the $ 150,000 oil payment and its transfer was arranged for as part of the lease transaction, hence the lease and oil payment were in effect sold to two purchasers for $ 255,655.45, subject to a single reserved oil payment of $ 200,000. In the alternative the petitioners contend that the oil payment of $ 150,000 was a capital asset in the hands of Killam, separate from the subsequent oil payment, hence its sale resulted in long-term capital gain. They cite
In
The purpose of § 117 was "to relieve the taxpayer from * * * excessive tax burdens on gains resulting from a conversion of capital investments, and to remove the deterrent effect of those burdens on such conversions." See
* * * *
Only a fraction of the oil or sulphur rights were transferred, the balance being retained.
* * * *
The substance of what was assigned was the right to receive future income. The substance of what was received was the present value of income1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 19">*26 which the 33 T.C. 345">*348 recipient would otherwise obtain in the future. In short, consideration was paid for the right to receive future income, not for an increase in the value of the income-producing property.
These arrangements seem to us transparent devices. Their forms do not control. Their essence is determined not by subtleties of draftsmanship but by their total effect.
In a footnote to the
The petitioners argue that the
According to the
In
But here, plaintiffs contend, Elsa Wineman was not selling or assigning only future income: she sold her entire ownership in an income-producing capital asset and thereby relinquished forever all rights thereto. In answer to plaintiffs on this point, we are unable to agree that a transfer of the entire asset is dispositive of the case.
See also
The second issue concerns the allocation of the payment of $ 105,655.45. Killam and Hurd allocated the entire payment as the cost basis of lease and well equipment. The respondent determined that the lease had a fair market value of $ 211,000 and the equipment $ 105,655.45 and allocated the consideration 50 per cent to the depreciable and 50 per cent to the nondepreciable assets. The petitioners contend that they contracted to acquire the equipment at its book value and correctly allocated the entire payment to equipment.
The partners agreed to operate the lease in a prudent manner during payout of the oil payments. The oil payments were payable out of 75 per cent or 80 per cent of seven-eighths of the oil. There was a part of production available to the partnership immediately and seven-eighths of it after payout of the reserved payments. Plainly, the purchasers acquired the oil reserves and there was some value to this at the time of the transaction. There was testimony that in 1954 the Internal Revenue Service questioned the consideration paid O.W. Killam for the lease and that the partnership then conveyed to him an oil payment of $ 100,5001959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 19">*30 as additional consideration. This tends to support the valuation of $ 211,000 for the whole property. There is no evidence to show that the respondent's valuation was wrong or that the allocation was erroneous. The respondent is sustained.
1. Proceedings of the following petitioners are consolidated herewith: Winfield Killam, Docket No. 64476; Radcliffe Killam and Sue Spivey Killam, Docket No. 64477; and John G. Hurd and Estate of Patricia K. Hurd, Deceased, Radcliffe Killam, Independent Executor, Docket No. 64478.↩